COLUMN-Lead, the bull market no-one wants to buy into: Andy Home

(Repeats with no changes. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters)

* LME lead market: https://tmsnrt.rs/2CKxcXn

By Andy Home

LONDON, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Historically low stocks, a yawning supply deficit and a depleted pipeline of future mine growth.

Lead has all the hallmarks of a classic bull commodity story.

Yet the unglamorous metal has been the worst performer this year among the core base metals traded on the London Metal Exchange (LME).

LME three-month lead is currently trading around the $2,000 per tonne level, down almost 23 percent since the start of 2018 and struggling to recover from the two-year low of $1,876 recorded earlier this month.

Fund managers don't like lead's toxic past and they don't much like its future prospects either.

Lead's demand fortunes are inextricably tied to the batteries used to power conventional internal combustion vehicles, which means the metal is likely to be one of the main casualties of the electric vehicle revolution.

This lack of investment "sex appeal" leaves the lead price beholden to the gyrations of zinc, the second-weakest LME performer this year. Indeed, the ever-popular relative value trade between the two "sister metals" is at times a price driver in its own right.

Yet, lead's supply problems are more structurally severe than those of zinc and the divergence in supply performance is only going to grow.

Graphic on LME lead: https://tmsnrt.rs/2CKxcXn

WIDE DEFICIT, LOW STOCKS

The International Lead and Zinc Group (ILZSG) has just drastically revised its estimate of supply-demand balance in the lead market.

At its October meeting the group lifted its assessment of the supply deficit this year to 123,000 tonnes from its April forecast of 17,000 tonnes.

While projected demand growth has been slashed to just 0.2 percent from 2.7 percent, the supply side of the equation has come in for even more radical revision.

Mine supply, which was expected to grow by a robust 4.2 percent in April, is now expected to fall by 0.2 percent this year.

That in turn will drag refined metal production growth down to just 0.4 percent from a previous forecast of 3.8 percent.

The ILZSG's estimates are broadly in line with those of Wood Mackenzie, although the research group has a slightly different deficit timeline.

But, according to Farid Ahmed, Woodmac's lead analyst, "what is certainly true is that our 2018 mine supply figures have continued to fall throughout the year" to the tune of around 450,000 tonnes, split fairly evenly between China and the rest of the world.